國立臺灣師範大學資訊教育研究所Lin, Janet Mei-ChuenLiu, Shu-FenTzeng, Wen-Jeng2014-10-302014-10-302009-06-28http://rportal.lib.ntnu.edu.tw/handle/20.500.12235/34723The purpose of this study was to investigate how parents and children collaborated with each other when they wrote MSWLogo programs together. A multi-case study approach, in which three parent-child pairs were observed directly during a five-day computer camp, was used. Each pair was assigned a total of 33 programming tasks to solve during the course. Qualitative data were collected through classroom observation, individual interviews and video recording. Findings from this study indicated that parent-child collaboration in programming naturally fell into a special form of “pair programming”in which the parent and the child in each pair took the roles of “the reviewer”and “the driver”respectively. It was also shown that, under the supervision of their parents, the children were able to work through the programming problems more systematically, which resulted in programs that were more compact and contained fewer errors. Moreover, the parents took care to ensure that their children reflected and looked back at what they had done to solve a problem. The participating parents and children alike found great pleasure in learning to program collaboratively.Parent-child collaboration in MSWLogo programming